Method and means for electrical signaling and control



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METHOD AND MEANS FOR ELECTRICAL SIGNALING AND CONTROL Filed Jan. 25. 19 10 Sheets-Sheet 10 Amp/i/ers d c. cfieck amceck I gwfl/atiny ens/altar I amvzwtpp Patented Oct. 25, 1932 PATENT OFFICE ALBERT V. '1. DAY, 01 NEW ROCHELLE, NEW YORK METHOD AND MEANS FOR ELECTRTGAL SIGNALING AND CONTROL Application filed January 85, 1919. Serial No. 73,051.

In addition to the invention disclosed and claimed herein, this specification also discloses additional invention claimed in my later ap- 'plication Serial Number 653,450, which will mature in my companion United States patent bearing the issue number consecutively following the number of the patent. For instance, my said companion patent claims the method herein designated as phase-differentiated multiplexing, while this resent patent claims the multiplexing di erentiation between amplitude modulation and modulation of wave-length.

This invention consists in improvements in methods and apparatus for carrier-wave signaling and control, either by radio transmis sion, or through metallic circuits. This means that the invention in its broadest aspect, may employ a carrier-wave either to transmit a telephonic, telegraphic or other signal, or to transmit telematic control to any distant device, for instance a ship or submarine, or an aerial torpedo. But for brevity hereinafter, the terms signal or signaling or the like, unless particularly qualified, will be employed in the broadest sense to include not only what is ordinarily called signaling, but also to include the transmission of said telematic control to distant devices in. the manner of signals to which they are made inherently responsive.

These improvements are designed to increase the efliciency and excellence of transmission, and to reduce the disturbing efi'ects of waves and currents foreign to the signal, and to accomplish the multiplex transmission of telegraph or telephone or other signals, and to accomplish simultaneous radio receiving and sending on a common aerial.

The said improvements are exemplified in the accompanying drawings, which will now be described in the order in which they are numbered. 1

Figure 1 is a diagram showing apparatus which may be employed in several different ways for receiving radio telegraph or telephone signals.

Figure 2 is a diagram of an apparatus particularly designed for receiving radio telephone signals.

Figure 3 is a diagram showing apparatus for simultaneous sending and receiving of aerial telephone signals.

Figure 4 is a diagram of an ap aratus particularly designed for receiving ra io telephone signals, and indicates the means for simultaneous sending on the receiving aerial.

Figure 4A is a vector diagram of wave compositions which obtain in the detectors or demodulators of Figures 1, 2, 4, etc.

Figure 5 is a diagram of an apparatus for simultaneously sending and receiving telephone signals through a common aerial, and for multiplexing the received signals.

Figure 6 is a diagram of an apparatus for the mutiplex sending of radio telephone and telegraph signals.

Figure 7 is a diagram of an apparatus for the multiplex sending of radio telephone and telegraph signals.

Figure 8 is a diagram of an apparatus for transmitting the telegraphic signal through the field of the current-modulating generators of Figure 7.

Fi ure 9 is a diagram of apparatus for the multiplex receiving of radio telephone signals.

Figure 10 is a diagram of a receiver construction which may be employed in the system of Figure 9.

Figs. Hand 12 are diagrams of appara-- tus fOIIS' receiving radio telephone or telegraph s1 a ill of the telephonic receiving means of the foregoing figures, are adapted for receiving 5 telegraphic signals transmitted by carrierwave modulation, for instance as transmitted in Figure 7, by the transmitting key 735 which controls the modulating wave of audio frequency superposed on the field of the radiofrequency generator 718.

Fi ures 5 and 9 have been particularly mentioned as showing means for the multiplex receiving of signal-modulated carrier- 'waves, because these figures particularly as illustrate the duplication of apparatus employed for this purpose; but it will be understood that the recelving means of Figures 1 and 2 and 4 which employ supplemental waves, are likewise designed for such multi- 1 said means as may be necessary for that purpose. This duplication of apparatus for multiplexing has been particularl and described in the systems of igures 5 and 9 because the manner of arranging these re ceivin means for this purpose, would not be so ObVlOllS from their showing as employed for one signal alone.

In the system of Figure 1, the duplex dlfferential audion detector or demodulator 531 is acted upon jointly by aerial waves from the antenna 502, and supplemental or local waves from the enerator 510. A potentiometer 506 is emp oyed to adjust the mean potential of the detector grids 511b and 5110, so as to attain maximum detector efiiciency. The condensers 544?) and 5440 permit the flow of radio frequency waves in the plate circuit of the battery 517, while their stored-up rectified current components are transmitted through the sections d, e and d, f of the primar of the audio transformer 518. The rectifie acting alone, are neutrally balanced in these two sections of the audio primary, so that the audio transformer 518 will transmit to the duplex differential audion amplifier 532, only the sustained wave of the generator 510, and the joint effects of the aerial and supplemental waves co-acting together on the detector 531.

Radio waves from the aerial circuit, when acting alone, will not unbalance the detector or demodulation effects to produce an unbalanced flow of rectified current through the transformer primaries d e and d f, but when the aerial and supplemental waves act togather on the detector in phase consonance, then these two waves will reinforce each other in one of the detector grids, while tending to counteract each other in the opposite detector grid. Thus will be produced in the opposed primary coils of the audio transformer 518, an unbalancing of unidirectional current which will effectively vary with tele- -phonic strength modulations in the received carrier-wave, providing the supplemental wave supplied from the local source 510 effects the detector grids in continuous synchronism and phase correspondence with the aerial wave. When the received carrier wave is'phase-modulated as explained hereinafter, it will be superposed on the su plemental wave in phase quadrature, an its phase modulations will then produce unbalancing of the resultant wave in the opposite grids so as to vary the rectified wave in accord with such phase inodulations.

The current supplied by the source 510 to the primary coil 508 of the radio trans-' former, may be maintained in synchronism with the received carrier-wave,'for the purposes of tele hony. This synchronism may be accomplis ed in various ways explained illustrated I or translated effects of aerial currents hereinafter. For instance, the generator 510 of Figure 1 may be the coil 639 of Figure 4. In this case the cou ling leads 546 of igure 1 would be employe to deliver aerial current to the heterodyne detector 634 of Figure 4.

Since the direct rectifying action of the aerial waves acting alone on the detector 531, is entirely balanced out of the audio transformer 518, it follows that the disturbing effects of atmospheric or other foreign currents, will be only such as produced by their co-action with the supplemental local waves from the source 510.

When the local source 510 delivers supplemental waves in synchronism with the carrier waves, for the purposes of telephony, the aerial 502 may'be detuned to produce static or atmospheric interference waves or beatwaves of very short length in the audio circuits. These interference or beat waves produced in the audio circuits of the detector "531, by joint action of the atmospheric waves frequency of the supplemental local waves.

Thus the foreign waves produced in the audio circuits by atmospherics may be rendered shorter than the telephonic voice waves.

In other words, the aerial 502 may be detuned from the frequency of the carrierwave, so that its natural oscillations excited by atmospherics and other foreign waves, will have a frequency sufiiciently different from the'frequency of the carrier-wave and local source 510, to produce interference or beat frequencies of a very rapid order in the detector plate circuit and audio transformer 518. These foreign disturbances will thus be limited to exceedingly short waves which can be selectively sup ressed in the audio circuits without suppressing the longer waves of the voice currents or signaling currents. -Under these circumstances, of course, the carrierwave is a forced wave intheaerial, and the foreign Wave isa free wave, but the aerial will be tuned as near to the carrier-wave frethe transformer-518 with the ampli er grids 5195 and 5190 so as to excite. these grids equally, so that all waves transmitted by the transformer 518 will have equal rectifying effects in the opposite plate circuits 5206 and 5200.. These opposite plate circuits include the opposite parts of the primary of the,

transformer 527. and these opposed primary coils are disposed in opposite or balanced inductive relation to their common secondary, with respect to the direction of current flow from the battery 525.

Therefore the rectified components of battery current will have neutral inductive relation to the output of the transformer 527. But the current waves from the transformer 518 will be exactly transmitted through the amplifier 532 and transformer 527, because these'waves will produce opposite instantaneous effects in the opposite grids and the opposite plate circuits of the amplifier.

The output current from the secondary of the transformer 527, consisting of the rectified telephonic waves and superposed shorter foreign waves, may be transmitted through any kind of wave filter, or device adapted to selectively suppress the foreign waves by virtue of their shorter length. Generally speaking, any device will serve the purpose which will transmit the telephonic waves more efficiently than the disturbing waves, because of the greater length of the telephonic waves.

The rectified telephonic current with its superposed shorter disturbing waves may now be transmitted through anysuitable number of amplifiers in succession, such as 532, 533, and also through any suitable number of circuits or devices adapted to selectively suppress the shorter disturbing waves. For instance, as shown in the drawings, an artificial loaded transmission line 528, 529, may be employed for this purpose, its inductances 529 and capacities 528 being proportioned so as to efliciently transmit all .waves of essential vocal or telephonic length, while the disturbing waves will be shorter than the minimum wave length for which the circuit is designed. Thus the telephonic current may be amplified and its superposed disturbances effectually suppressed, before its ultimate delivery to the telephone 538. In other words, the foreign disturbing waves will be suppressed in audio modulations of a carrier-wave.

the loaded transmission lines 528, 529, and 536, 537, while the differential amplifiers 532 and 533 will build up the vocal or telephonic current to adequate audible value in the receiver 538.

The arrangement of Figure 1 may be employed for heterodyne receiving of telegraph y messages transmitted in the usual way establishing and discontinuing a wave train, but this use of the apparatus will be very different from its use in the practice of the method hereinafter claimed, wherein a carrierwave-train is modulated to convey a telephonic signal or to convey a telegraphic signal in the manner of a telephonic signal by The employment of the apparatus of Figure 1 for heterodyne reception of ordinary telegraphic signals, is not claimed in this application. When the apparatus is to be used for this purpose, the local generator 510 will be em- ,ployed to produce a current different from the fundamental or free frequency of the aerial 502, and asignaling wave will be employed with a frequency different from either the local generator or free aerial frequency. For instance, the signaling wave may advan-i tageously have a frequency between the frequency of the local generator and the free frequency of the aerial. In any event, the differential or beat frequency effected by co-action of the local waves and the free antenna oscillations, may be very much higher than the heterodyne audio frequency eflected by co-action of the signaling wave and the local wave. Thus the disturbing effects of atmospherics and foreign currents may be limited. to short waves in the audio circuits, susceptible of being selectively suppressed, as before explained. In such heterodyne telegraph signaling the telephone receiver 538 would be employed as shown in the drawings.

The heterodyne action of the apparatus of Figure 1 may also be employed to receive signals conveyed in the modulations of a carrier-. wave-train, if the resulting signaling beat waves be raised to a frequency sufficiently exceeding the vocal or modulation frequency. When this is done the disturbing beat waves due to atmospheric and foreign currents may still be rendered much shorter than the signaling beat waves simply by determining the III III

relationship of local generaton frequency,

vocal or modulation frequency, this signaling beat wave will at once constitute a secondary carrier-wavesubject to all the telephonic or telegraphic modulations of the carrier-Wave received from the atmosphere by the aerial 502. cs

Such a secondary carrier-wave may be transmitted through any suitable number of am lifiers, and through any suitable number of ltering circuits or devices merelyadapted to suppress short waves dlspro ortlonately. When this is done, the relative y short-disturbing waves will be effectively suppressed while all frequencies of audio modulation, such as voice modulation, can be transmitted with almost equal efiiciency, and therefore without considerable distortion, because as they occur in the secondary carrier-wave they may be constituted in component waves whose frequencies differ from one another by a relatively small percentage'as compared with their frequency-differentiation 1n the original modulating telephonic current. Th s need not be further explained, since it 1s well understood in the mathematics of carrier-wave modulation. For this purpose the line coils 529 might be simple resistances, so that with the condensers 528, they would aproximate a co-action of resistance and capacity such as exists in an ordinary telephone line. It is well understood that an ordinary telephone line transmits short waves with much greater loss than long waves.

Or, the artificial telephone transmission line may have its capacities 528 and inductances 529, so proportioned as to transmit all modulation components of the secondary carrier-wave with equal efliciency, while the shorter disturbing waves may have less than the minimum wave length which the line is designed to efliciently transmit.

The secondary carrier-wave, thus filtered and amplified, may be transmitted through the switch 628 to a non-polarized telephone receiver 735 connected in series with a condenser tuned to the frequency of the secondary carrier-wave.

Or the secondary carrier-wave may be applied to the opposite grids of the duplex rectifier 629 so as to produce therein, opposite and e ual instantaneous variations of potential, t us avoiding the usual repetition of the carrier-wave in the audio transformer 632 included in the plate circuit of the said rectifier. In these circumstances the audio transformer 632 will receive the rectified current component with the usual efficiency, and with a superposed alternating current having twice the carrier-wave frequency, and far less amplitude than the carrier-wave component usually transmitted through a rectifier. Hence, even if the secondary carrier-wave applied to the detector grids is not above the audible limit, its effects may become inaudible in the wave an octave higher in the audio circuit of the detector.

In any event, the carrier-wave may be short enough to carry all the essential vocal or telephonic waves, and yet may be long enough to be audible, in' which instance its audibility may be tuned out, for example by a resonance bridge shown as interposed vbetween the audio transformer 632 and the telephone 633. In this bridge one opposing pair of arms are simple ohmic resistances,

while the other opposing pair of arms 'com-' prise inductance and capacity tuned to the wave to be silenced, and having the same ohmic component as the aforesaid simple ohmic resistances. These inductances and capacities thus neutralize each other at the frequency of the wave which may be elimiresponsive to the joint action of the aerial waves and synchronous locally energizedsupplemental waves supplied by the transformer 589. The audion 575 is employed as an amplifier to supply said synchronous local waves to the transformer 589 and detector 591, in the followin manner.

Although the aerial may e detuned as before explained, for the purposes of eliminating atmospherics and other disturbances, the secondary of the coupling 573 may be tuned for the fundamental or unmodulated component of the carrier-wave so as to respond most efficiently to the forced wave of this carrier frequency in the aerial. The duplex audion amplifier 575 amplifies the carrierwave received from the aerial and delivers it through the radio transformer 579 without a rectified effect, because the rectifie urrent components are balanced out of the rimary of this transformer. Regenerative radio transformers 576 are employed, and the circuits may be tuned by the condensers 574 and 578 so as to be resonant to the fundamental component of the carrier-wave, while tending to suppress its modulations and all other waves. The differential amplifier 532 of Figure 1 could be employed in lieu of the re enerative amplifier 575.

rom the radio transformer 579 the fundamental component of the carrier-wave may be transmitted through any desired number of amplifiers such as 580 and 585, which may be tuned to the carrier-wave. The reason why this amplifier cascade may be thus extended indefinitely through any number of amplifying stages is because the consequent overloading or saturation of an excess number of such stages will not im ir its function of suppressing amplitude uctuations in the wave which it transmits. So lon as the cascade has enough stages to amplify its weakest input wave substantially up to the power limit of its final amplifying stage, the output wave amplitude of said final stage cannot be substantially increased or' yvaried by any fluctuating increase of input Y A sufficient number of tuning 5 trol by the input waves received from the wave amplitude. Thus the final output wave amplitude of the cascade will be rendered constant, and any number of additional or excess amplifying stages will merely become overloaded or saturated without impairing that constancy, so that the number of amplifying stages does not present the diflicult problem of determination and power regulation imposed by a cascade required to faithfully repeat am litude modulations. The carrier-wave may be transmitted also through any number .of tuned circuits such as shown between these amplifiers 580 and 585. These tuned circuits include parallel inductance and capacity 581, 582 tuned to the fundamental carrier-wave, and series inductance and capacity 583, 584 also tuned to the fundamental carrier-wave. devices thus employed in sequence will. e ectually suppress the modulations of the carrier-wave while efliciently transmitting the fundamental component thereof. Similar tuning devices employed in suflicient number will eventually eliminate all foreign waves de-v rived from atmospherics or other causes.

Thus will be produced in the output circuit of the'final amplifier, a greatly amplified constant unmodulated wave of the fundamental carrier frequency; and this'constant wave will be employed as the local or supplemental wave to energize the grids of the detector 591 through the radio transformer 589, 588. Inductance or capacity at any point in the course of transmission from the aerial couplin 573 to the transformer primary 589, may is adjusted so as to maintain this supplemental Wave in required phase relation with the aerial carrier-wave from the coupling 590, as the two are superposed on the grids of the differential detector 591.

Thus the detector 591 delivers through its audio transformer 592, the rectified or demodulation telephonic current in response to the telephonic modulations of the carrierwave, in accordance with the principles of modulation herein explained. This rectified telephonic current may be transmitted through any suitable number of amplifiers such as 596 and 597, and through any suitable number of loaded transmission circuits or other wave-filtering means adapted to transmit the vocal components while suppressing the much shorter disturbing waves induced by atmospherics, etc.

Generally considered, any known type of amplifier may be employed at 575, 580, 585, etc., but if the tuned regenerative amplifier be adopted, its feed-back coupling, for example, 576, must be insufficient to maintain wave generation or oscillation independent of conaerial, lest the synchronizing control of the su plement waves be lost.

11 receiving strength-modulated signals it is not essential that the modulation component of the carrier-wave be suppressed in the transformer coil 589 exec t as this is incurred the tuning which avors the fundamenta unmodulated component. But when the amplitude of the sup lemental wave in this coil 589' is rendered su stantialmore constant than w en both factor waves vary together as they do when fadin occurs in an ordinary detector. Of course t is antifading function operates equally for signals carried by modu ations o amplitude and signals carried by modulations of wave length as hereinafter described. Also in demodulating such length-modulated signals, the said suppression of strength fluctuations in the coil 589 eliminates therefrom the effects of undesired stren h fluctuations caused either by said lengt -modulation or by independent amplitude modulations employed to transmit a separate si al on the same carrier as hereinafter ex ained. It should be noted that the unmo ulated component of a radiated strength-modulated carrier-wave may be relatively minute, with a consequent saving in sending power, because its effective energy is derived at the receiving station.

In the system of Figure 3, the aerial 605 maybe 'detuned from the frequency of the carrier-wave which it is receiving, while the transmitting apparatus 608 may 0 erate at the free frequency of the aerial. is before explained, this free frequency in the aerial need not disturb the received signals derived from the forced carrier-wave in the aerial.

The apparatus of Figure 3 is not designed to maintain exact synchronism of the local supplemental wave and received car'rierwave, in the detector grids. On the contrary, the local wave is applied in such manner that its co-action with a strength modulated or length-modulated carrier-wave in the detector grids, will be continuously effective to sound the signal through one or both of the telephone receivers 18 when said waves have the same mean frequency with an indefinite or drifting mean phase relation, and will be continuously effective to produce a signaL,

conveying actuation of the single receiver diaphragm 624 when a strength-modulated constant by derivation thropgh the amplie v carrier-wave and the local wave have different frequencies.

The local or supplemental wave is produced by the generator 22 and divided into two phases approximately in quadrature with each other in the primaries of the radio transformers 600. Now, if the carrier-wave and local wave have virtually the same frequency, then as the phase of the local wave is slowly advanced or retarded in relation to the mean phase of the received carrier-wave, the two waves will occur in effective phase relation in the ids of one detector 601 so as to co-act with e ciency in that detector, while in the grids of the other detector 601 the local and carrier-waves are occurring in non-effective phase relation so that their co-action has no substantial effect on the audio circuit of the detector. Each of the rectifiers 601 may independently 0 rate a separate telephone receiver throug circuits including suitable amplifying and wave-filtering means such as before described, and indicated at 603 in this figure. These two telephones may be mounton a common head-piece 18 and held at the operators ears, so that one ear or the other will continually receive the telephonic signal.

It should be noted that in the foregoing employment of the apparatus of Figure 3, the constant component of a strength-modulated carrier-wave maybe entirely dispensed with:

that is to say a strength-modulated carrierwave may be employed which has a zero mean value, as hereinafter explained.

The apparatus of Figure 3 may be employed for strength-modulated heterodyne telephone receiving in the following manner:

The local source will deliver a frequency different from the carrier-wave frequency, and. their resultant differential or beat currents in the detector output circuits, will be amplified by the amplifiers 603 and employed to energize respective alternating-current magnets623, symmetrically co-acting on a common telephonic diaghragm 624, so that their joint attraction thereon will always be as the sum of the squares of their instantaneous field-strengths, or currents. These beat currents in the magnets 623 will occur in quadrature, so long as the two detectors are excited in quadrature by the local source 22. The sum of the squares of these quadrature currents in the magnets 623 will be constant while their current waves are constant, so that their current waves will be entirely inaudible so long as they are not varied, even though they are of audible harmonic fre quency. But when varied by telephonic modulations of the strength of the received carrier-wave, the joint attraction of the two magnets 623 will vary accordingly, and actuate the telephonic diaphragms 624. If the frequency of the beat waves is high in the audible range, or above the audible range,

it will be desirable to counteract the resulting inductance of the magnets 623, by capacities 625 tuned to the beat frequency. This will also assist in selective suppression of foreign noises.

When the apparatus of Figure 3 is employed for simultaneous receiving and sending, it will co-operate with a distant station whose aerial is tuned for sending the carrierwave to be.received as a forced wave in the aerial 605. At the same time the local source at the distant station will be adjusted to produce that frequency which is necessary to co-act with the carrier-wave fre uency of the transmitting apparatus 608 sending the free carrier-wave from the aerial 605 to be received as a forced wave in the distant aerial.

Obviously, the receiving means of Figures 1 and 2, may be employed in the same general scheme for receiving a carrier-wave different from the natural antenna frequency, while simultaneously sending from the same antenna a carrier-wave having the natural antenna frequency.

The system of Figure 4 employs the same general scheme for sending with a carrierwave of the natural antenna frequency, while simultaneously receiving with a carrier-wave of different frequency. In this system the duplex demodulator or detector 646 receives the forced carrier-wave from the aerial coupling 606, and receives asynchronous local or supplemental wave through the transformer 645 from the inductor coil 639 whose frequency and phase are determined in the following manner. 7

The carrier-wave received by aerial 605 is transmitted to an additional duplex audion detector 634. As before explained, this detector isbalanced so that it will transmit no effects through its output audio transformer 635, when the detector grids are excited only by waves from the aerial acting alone. But these detector grids are simultaneously excited by high-frequency waves transmitted through the transformer 644 from the local generator 22. This local generator 22 has a frequency different from the received carrier- Wave, so that when the detector grids are excited simultaneously by both these waves, the detector will deliver through its output transformer 635, a heterodyne current having a frequency adapted to impel a synchronous motor.

This beat-current or motor-impelling current delivered by the transformer 635 is passed through a number of amplifiers which may be tuned to its frequency, and is also passed through any desired number of wave filters or resonant circuits tending to suppress all currents of. different frequency. In the diagram these amplifiers and wave-filtering means are presumed to reside in the box 636. The beat frequency to be passed through this selective box is relatively so low Inn are differentiated from sai at fre 'uency by a much higher percenta' e than 0 tains' in the aerial circuit. There y all modulations and foreign frequencies can be more readily suppressed. The desired beat-current is thus amplified in such degree as to synchronously drive the synchronous motor 637 while the filterin or tuning means 'will sufficiently suppress t e other beat-currents roduced in the transformer secondar 635 y co-action of the local source'22 with the sending generator 608, or with any aerial current foreign to the received carrier-wave.

Tho synchronous motor 637 rotates an inductorcoil or generating coil 639, which-is disposed in the rotary field roduced by the coils 640 and 641 energized in quadrature phase relation by current from the generator 22. Now, the frequency of the current induced in the inductor coil 639 must be the frequency of the rotary-field 640, 641 plus or minusthe angular velocity of the inductor coil 639. Since the inductor coil 639 rotates at a frequency which is the difference between the received carrier-wave frequency and the local frequency 22, its rotation therefore may be employed to add or subtract this differential frequency to or from the current induced in the coil from the rotaryfield which has the frequency of the local generator 22. Thus the output current of the coil 639 may be maintained inexact synchronism with the mean phase of the received carrier-wave.

The current thus produced by the coil 639 is transmitted through a collector 638 and transformer 645 to the grids of the detector 646. Any number of amplifiers, tuned circuits and wave-filters may be introduced in the box 645A in the course of transmission from the inductor coil 639 to the transformer the stationary coils 640 and 641 which produce the rotaryfield.

The detector 646 delivers the rectified telephonic current or demodulation current through the audio transformer 647 and through suitable amplifiers and wave-filtering means indicated at 648, and thence to the telephone 18.

If atmospherics are to be disregarded,

then the free frequency of the aerial 605 and snip ressed thereinsending generator 608, may be so near to that i of the inductor 639, that audible beats would be produced, and these may be tuned out by the tuning bridges 649 and 650, and as many more as may be desired. These bridges opferent beat frequencies, so as to successively eliminate as many foreign signaling currents as may occurto produce audible beats in the detector 646.

In Figure 5 the sendingcoupling is represented at 714, and the receiving coupling at 71-5. The local generator 22produces a supplemental wave differing in frequency from the mean frequency of the received carrierwave, so as to produce the beat frequency through the differential detector 676, for propelling the synchronous motor 686, through current-amplifying and wave-filtering means 682.

The waves from the local generator 22 are divided into quadrature phases in the transformers 671 and 672, so that they will pro- I duce through their respective differential detectors 674 and 675, beat-currents in quadra-- ture with each other in the audio transformers 677 and 678. These quadrature currents in the transformers 677 and 678, are of course synchronous with the beat-current in the audio transformer 679. Therefore when the beat-currents derived through the transformers 677 and 678 are conveyed through suitable amplifying and wave-filtering means at 680 and 681, they will produce through the quadrature field-coils 683', and 684, a rotaryfield having the same mean angular velocity as the synchronous motor 686. vTherefore, when the two coils 685 and 708 are mechanically rotated by the armature 686 in the dire'ction of the rotary-field 683, 684, these coils 685 and 708 will maintain a fixed angular relation with respect to the rotating axis of 'said field, so long as the said field axis rotates at a constant velocity. But if the rotary field is subjected to slight accelerations and retardations occurring alternately, then the coils 685 and 708 will still rotate at the mean field-velocity, so that the rotating field axis will have a fixed mean position relative to these mechanically rotated coils.

The heterodyne or beat-currents which flow in the coils 683 and 684 to produce the rotary field, are derived from co-action of the local wave. and the received carrier-wave, superposed in the detectors 674 and 675. This coaction is such that the strength and phase of these beat-currents will vary with the strength and phase of the carrier-Wave. Therefore the strength and angular velocity of the rotary field will also vary with the strength and phase of the received carrierwave. These accelerations and retardations of current phase and rotary-field velocity, may be designated either as phase librations or base modulations. y

no of the mechanically rotated coils, for instance 685, will be disposed with the rotary field axis passing continually through the axis of the coil, so that this coil 685 will be subject to induced electromotive force by changes in the strength of the field, but w1ll not be effectually acted upon by slight angular variations or librations of the rotary-field axis with respect to the coil axis. This coil 685 will therefore produce in the telephone 712 all vocal or telephonic waves resulting from the strength modulations in the received carrier-wave. But this telephone 712 will remain silent to small phase librations of the received carrier-wave resulting in slight phase librations of the rotary-field axis with respect to the coil 685, while said coil rotates at constant velocity becauseof .its momentum.

The other coil 708 is disposed in the mean plane of the rotating field so that it will not receive secondary electro-motive-force from changes in field strength due to strengthmodulations of the carrier wave, but will be efficiently energized with secondary currents resulting from phase librations of the rotaryfield due to phase modulations of the carrier wave, which cause the field axis to oscillate forward and backward relative to the coil 708 which rotates at constant velocity.

Therefore if the aerial of Figure 5 receives a carrier-wave from a distant station, having its strength modulated by one telephonic transmitter, and having a phase modulation produced by another telephonic transmitter, the telephones 711 and 712 will respond each to one of the sending transmitters, without interference from the other transmitter.

Figure 6 shows one means of multiplex transmission for sending two telephonic signals simultaneously to separate recep tors such as the telephones 711 and 712 of Figure 5. In Figure 6, the receiving coupling 715 may operate a receiving apparatus such as shown in Figure 5, while the sending coupling 714 will transmit a. carrier-wave having the natural frequency of the aerial. This carrier-wave will be produced by the generator 693 whose field 713 is excited by the battery in series with the modulating transmitter 691, so that this transmitter modulates the strength of the outgoing wave without affecting its phase. The condenser 694 is adjusted for resonance with the inductance bridge 695 at the carrier-wave frequency of the generator 693, and the permeability of the iron cores of the inductance bridge varies with their degree of saturation as determined by current from the battery 690 and as modulated by current from the transmitter 688 through the transformer 689, so as to produce a libr tion or modulation in the phase of the car"- rier-wave which may be confined within limits which will not substantially modulate its strength.

The strength-modulating wave in the coil 713 may be omitted, and the apparatus of Figure 6 may be employed solely for transmitting the phase-modulated signal. In this specific apparatus the phase libration will never attain 180 degrees. Therefore it consists in a phase acceleration which increases the carrier wave frequency by less than a half cycle during one half cycle of the modulating wave, and a phase retardation which decelerates the carrier wave frequency by less than a half cycle during the ensuing half cycle of the modulating wave. Hence the numeric frequency-variation of the carrier Wave is less than the actual frequency of the modulation which produces it, and the required frequency range or width of allocated signaling channel is correspondingly small. Thus the said frequency relation presents an advantage over ordinary strength-modulation which entails side-band frequencies diflering from the basic carrier frequency by a range equal to the modulating frequency, and hence requiring a channel allocation of correspondingly wide range.

For instance, the usual strength-modulation of a 100 kilocycle carrier wave by a modulating wave of 1 kilocycle, entails two modulation waves or side-band waves of 99 and 101 kilocycles. Even if one of these sidebands is suppressed, the other still ranges I kilocycle, or 1 per cent, either above or below the basic carrier frequency, so as to require a wave channel at least 1 kilocycle wide, or 1 per cent. of the basic frequency. In comparison therewith, a kilocycle carrier wave from the generator 693 of Fig. 6 may have its phase alternately accelerated and retarded 36 degrees, or 0.1 cycle, by a modulating wave of 1 kilocycle frequency from the generator 731 or m crophone 688. Thus, the carrier wave is accelerated 0.1 cycle during 0.5 cycle of the modulating wave. That is, during the time lapse which would normally entail a carrier wave train of 50 cycles, each of said 50 waves is shortened only enough to cumulatively increase their total number from 50 cycles to 50.1 cycles. This would constitute a frequency increase of only 0.2 per cent. if the rate of carrier phase acceleration were uniform during said time lapse or half cycle of the modulating wave. But said rate of phase acceleration varies with the rate of change in the instantaneous ordinates of the sinusoidal modulating wave. Therefore, said 0.2 per cent. frequency increase must be multiplied by the ratio (3.141622) of maximum sinusoidal change to mean sinusoidal change in the modulating wave. This correction results in an actual carrier-frequency increase of about 0.3 per cent. at the instant of zero modulating current when the carrier waves arebeing most rapidly shortened and accelerated.

The said 0.3 per cent. increase of carrier frequency during one-half cycle of the modulating wave, is followed by a corresponding 0.3 per cent. decrease during the ensuing half cycle of modulating wave, so that the total carrier frequen'cy variation, and the reuired Width of wave channel, is the sum of t ese opposite variations which aggregate only 0.6 per cent. of the basic carrier frequency, as compared with the 1.0 per cent. frequency range entailed in the side-band modulation above set forth. Moreover, the said 1.0 per cent. side-band range is irreducibly inherent in the ratio of modulating and carrier frequencies, whereas the said 0.6 per cent. carrier-frequency range entailed in the system of Fig. 6 is proportionate to the maximum allowed phase displacement which can be reduced at will much below the said 36 degrees assumed for convenient exposition. Since the above described modulation of phase and frequency is actually constituted in modulations of the wave length of the carrier, it may be properly designated as length modulation.

As before mentioned, when the transmitting station is required to radiate a lengthmodulated carrier wave without strength modulations, the current in the generator 0011 713 of Figure 6 may be maintained constant and unmodulated. In any event the wave length and frequency of the voltage wave supplied by the source 693 is a fixed constant which maintains constancy of the mean frequency of the radiated wave irrespective of its phase or frequency modulations, and 1rrespective of accidental changes in the properties of the modulating elements 694, 695. In other words, the capacity and inductance 694, 695 are not incorporated as parts ofan oscillation generator whose mean frequency they determine, but on the contrary, their mean resonant frequency may be varied in any degree without shifting the mean fre-' quency of the radiated wave out the center of its allocated signaling channel. .Thus when the allocated channel range is narrow and critical, the prime source of its carrier wave symbolized at 693 can be critically regulated as a master source to maintain the required channel frequency irrespective of the quality or number of its transmitting circuits symbolized at 695, 694, 727, 714.

The multiplexing procedure of Figures 5 and 6 has been explained as a separation which depends upon using a strength modulation of the carrier wave for one signal, and a phase modulation or frequency modulation of the carrier-wave for the other signal. Another transmitter for producing such a doubly modulated carrier wave will now be described in Figure 7.

In Fig. 7 the incoming carrier-wave having a frequency different from the natural antenna frequency is received through the aerial coupling 715, while the coupling 714 is employed to transmit the multiplex sending 5) will respond only to the resulting strengthmodulation in the rotary-field 683, 684.

The transmitter 725 will modulate both quadrature phase components of the carrierwave simultaneously and equally but in opposite directions of strength variation, so as to effect a limited phase libration of their resultant carrier-wave, without substantially modulating its resultant strength. Hence, as before explained, the other telephone (for example 712 of Figure 5) will respond only to the resulting phase libration in the rotaryfield 683, 684.

Now assume that the generator. field-coils 720 and 721 are not excited, but the enera-' tors are excited by currents in the fie d-coils 729 and 730, modulated by the transmitters 716 and 717 respectively. Thus the constant wave components of the two generators unite in quadrature or 90 degrees phase relation to form a resultant constant component of the carrier-wave, while the variable or strength-modulated components of the carrier-wave have zero mean value and are always diiferentiated by 7 their quadrature phase relation with each other. This multiplex composition of two strength-modulated carrier waves is hereinafter designated as phase-difi'erentiated multiplexing.

Now as the rotor coils 685 and 708 of Figure 5 rotate with the axis of the rotary field produced by the coils 683 and 684, the rotary field will have an unmodulated component in fixed angular relation to the rotor coils, and corresponding to the said constant component of the carrier-wave from the generators 718 and 719 of Figure 7. At the same time this rotary field will have two strength-modulated components of zero mean value in 90 degrees relation to each other, 'and both in fixed angular relation to the rotor coils.

These strength-modulated field components correspond with the voice-modulated phase the beat-current in either coil differentiated carrier-wave components derived from the generators 718 and 719.

Each of the rotor coils will be disposed in neutral inductive relation to one of the strength-modulated field components, and will derive its rectified telephonic current from the other strength-modulated field component. Obviously this relation can be accomplished with any phase difference less than 180 degrees, but can be most efiiciently accomplished with a phase difference of 90 degrees between the signal-modulated components of the carrier-wave. Thus the telephone 711 of Figure 5 will respond only to the transmitter 716 of Figure 7, and the telephpne 712 will respond only to the transmitter 71 It must be understood that the system of Figures 6 and 5 may dispense with the strength-modulated signal originating at 691 in Figure 6 and terminating at 712 in Figure 5. When this is done the range of phase modulation produced bythe transmitter 688 will not be limited by the need of minimizing the distortive strength modulations which it entails, inasmuch as the system will include no strength-demodulating receiver to bev disturbed by such distortions. The effect of said distortive strength modulations upon final reception of the phase-modulated signal in the receptor 711 will be nullified by those same functions of Figure 5 which eliminate a strength-modulated signal from said receptor. At the same time the same functions will likewise nullify the effects of all other distortive strength fluctuations occurring in the received phase-modulated wave from any other cause, such as an erratically variable attenuation of the radiated carrier in the transmission through the air.

Referring further to Figure 5, it will now be understood that the beat-currents in the two coils 683 and 684, are identical excepting for their phase difference. That is to say, alone partakes of the strength-modulations and phasemodulations or frequency-modulations of the received carrier-wave, so that either current alone could be employed to produce the rotary-field in any well known manner. Obviously in this case also, the rotary-field must vary in strength and phase and frequency in accordance with the strength and phase and frequency changes in the received carrierwave. Thus either beat current constitutes a secondary carrier wave whose strength and frequency modulations correspond with the primary carrier but whose mean frequency is lower than the primary mean frequency, so that the ratio of frequency modulation to mean frequency is greater in the secondary carrier than in the primary carrier. Demodulation is facilitated by thus translating the primary carrier into a secondary carrier having a greater percentage of frequency modulation.

Now, tial or heat-current produced in either of the rotary-field coils 683 or 684, may constitute a composite secondary carrier-wave including two strength-modulated components which are in quadrature with each other and which are modulated in accordance with the signaling modulations of the quadrature carrier-wave components received by the aerial in the phase-differentiated multiplexing; and it can be shown that this statement remains true even when these beat-currents have frequencies lower than the modulation frequency. In any event, it will be clear that the rotor 686, 685, 708 constitutes a means in which these secondary carrier-waves coact with local synchronous waves from the source 682, to translate the modulations of their quadrature phase-differentiated modulationcomponents into separate signal-conveying effects in the separate circuits leading to the respective telephones 711 and 712, through suitable amplifying and wave-filtering means 7 097 47 and 710-7 48.

As indicated in Figs. 6 and 7, each transmitter circuit may include two or more alternating-current generators, such as the generators 731, 7 32 in Fig. 6 and 741, 742 in Fig. 7. The generators thus included in each transmitter circuit will differ in frequency from each other, and will have longer wavelengths than the generators controlled by the transmitter circuits. These generators such as 7 31, 7 32,7 41,742 may be designated as modulating generators.

Each modulating generator may be connected into its transmitter circuit by a switch as indicated, and will thus superpose its waves on the audio voice waves in the transmitter circuit.

These waves of the modulating generators will thus become part of the composite modulating current for controlling the main carrier-wave generators.

Therefore the wave delivered by each modulating generator will be reproduced at the receiving station in the demodulator output circuit which responds to the sending transmitter associated with said modulating generator. For example, the waves of different frequencies delivered by the modulating generators 731 and 7 32 of Fig. 6 may be reproduced in the rotor coil 708 of Figure 5, and may be transmitted to the resonance magnets 743 and 744 tuned respectively to these different frequencies.

These resonance magnets 743 and 7 44 may be telegraph magnets responsive to a telegraph code transmitted hy the keys at 731 and 732 of Figure 6; or ordinary polarized telephones may be employed at 743 and 744 to derive the telegraph signal as a musical note. Or the frequencies of the phase-modulating it will also be clear that the diiferen- I 

